Yabba-dabba-do make an offer for Bedrock City, a theme park and campground south of the Grand Canyon, that comes with a dinosaur and volcano (both dormant).

For $2 million, you can own the Flintstones-inspired village that includes water delivered by pipes rather than woolly mammoths, and power that does not rely on prehistoric animals running on treadmills. The property is at the junction of State Route 64 and U.S. 180 in Valle, north of Williams.

Owner Linda Speckels, 73, said she is ready for an extended commercial break. Once Bedrock City is sold, she plans to spend time with family.

"It's time to move on and start a new chapter in my life," Speckels said. As owner and unofficial mayor for decades, Speckels said she may move to Flagstaff and spend more time with her daughters and grandchildren.

The 30-acre property includes a diner, convenience store and gift shop, as well as a 3,800-square-foot home. The smaller, stone-age homes within the park are said to belong to Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble, whom you're more likely to see on YouTube than in Bedrock City.

Also within Bedrock City limits are a jail, schoolhouse and the home of a police officer. There's a theater that has played the same clips for years. Those who have no idea of the nature of those clips may have rocks in their head.

Only a third of the property has been developed, Speckels said, leaving much room for the buyer's imagination.

Bedrock City is a page out of Arizona history. In the early 1970s, contractor Francis Speckels was asked to build a companion park to the successful Bedrock City in Custer, S.D.

Family memories have since formed the solid foundation on which Bedrock City was built.

Speckels said her greatest joys were meeting travelers from all over the world. Knowing none of them came specifically to see where cartoon Americans still lived in the Stone Age (nearly all were on their way to the Grand Canyon 23 miles to the north), she enjoyed watching children burn off energy during their short break from a long car trip.

"Even kids who had no idea who the Flintstones were would rush from here to there, getting a good look at everything." Speckels said. "We'd even get people who remembered visiting here in their childhood, and they brought their own kids."

Holly Hulen, a middle daughter living in Flagstaff and helping her mother with the sale, said her favorite memories revolved around working with sisters, aunts, uncles and cousins.

Well, that and the opportunity to see Bedrock after dark, which she often took for, er, granite.

"We'd play spooky games of hide and seek," Hulen said. "I'm not sure I realized how special that was."

Francis Speckels died more than 20 years ago, and Linda Speckels has been in charge ever since.

The decision to sell wasn't always set in stone. The property has been on and off the market over the last 10 years. A handful of rock-solid offers were made, but all crumbled over time.

This time, Speckels said, it's different.

"I'm motivated to sell," she said. "It's definitely time."

Bedrock City was established in 1972.(Photo: Richard Maack)

Bedrock City may have a rocky road ahead. Speckels noted the sale does not include rights to the Flintstones cartoons, created by the Hanna-Barbera studio.

Speckels said she could assist the new owners in obtaining rights, hoping Bedrock City continues as is. But she knows the new buyer may choose to close the park and turn the plot into something completely different.

"I'd love the see the park keep going," Speckels said. "It's a piece of Americana, something you are seeing less and less of nowadays. But I can't tell the buyer what to do."

Bedrock City does have cell service, as well as satellite TV — perfect for the modern Stone Age family.

Bedrock City

The 30-acre theme park with camping and RV spots is on the market for $2 million, for sale by owner. It's at the junction of State Route 674 and U.S. 180 in Valle, 23 miles south of Grand Canyon National Park.